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IsaacKoi
I am sure other members of ATS will want to join me in thanking Wendy Connors, Roderick B. Dyke and Giuliano Marinković.
Toxicsurf
Thank yous go out to Wendy Connors and Roderick B. Dyke...
EDIT to add: This should be made a sticky thread.
The GUT
I'm sure we've all flagged. Only so much we can do in that sense.
Nice to see a few of my favorite and well-versed ATS "ufologists" here.
IsaacKoi
Toxicsurf
Thank yous go out to Wendy Connors and Roderick B. Dyke...
I think it is important to thank Giuliano Marinković ("uforadio" here on ATS)
CardDown
...There's scant traces of present-day UFOlogists, I see only two entries for Stan Friedman, if he counts.
IsaacKoi
03: CASE for the FLYING SAUCERS with Edward R. Murrow
Date of Broadcast: 05.00.1950
Running Time: 00:27:46
Synopsis: A public affairs program that includes a 1947 telephone interview with Kenneth
Arnold, plus several rare recordings of early witnesses to Flying Discs in 1947, 1948 and 1949.
"Though it was classified "restricted", Sign's existence was eventually known to the general public under the moniker "Project Saucer". However, UFO historian Wendy Connors claimed, through an interview with a surviving Sign secretary, that "Project Saucer" was the project's original informal name and had actually begun in late 1946. If this was the case, then the Army Air Force had already begun investigation of UFOs well before the Kenneth Arnold sighting that launched the first flood of UFO reports of June–July 1947 in the United States.
12 Connors, Wendy. "Project Blue Book"
karl 12
a good friend also asked me to enquire if you were aware of any more info on this Wendy Connors interview with a Project Sign secretary concerning official UFO investigations going as far back as 1946.
Sign was seen as a very important undertaking: Ruppelt wrote that Sign "was given a 2A priority, 1A being the highest priority an Air Force project could have." Though it was classified "restricted", the study's existence was eventually known to the general public, and was often called "Project Saucer". However, UFO historian Wendy Connors established, through an interview with a surviving Sign secretary, that "Project Saucer" was the project's original informal name and had actually begun in late 1946. If this was the case, then the Army Air Force had already begun investigation of UFOs well before the Kenneth Arnold sighting that launched the first flood of UFO reports of June-July 1947 in the United States.
Officially Sign began on Feb. 11, 1948, although work under that code name had already
commenced on January 26th. When General Craigie gave tentative approval to the project back on
December 30th, he appointed Sign a "2A priority," the second highest, and a security classification
of "restricted," the lowest rating. Sign and later Grudge code names were kept secret, but their
existence became widely known and referred to in the press as "Project Saucer."
IsaacKoi
Relevant links are given below (including in a post below outlining the sections of this thread and giving links to each of the 12 compilations - just click on "Disc 1", "Disc 2" etc in that post) and are also included on the first page of a searchable PDF index.
IsaacKoiHi Karl12,
I don't recall hearing any recording of that interview.
I think that quote on the Wikipedia page on "Project Sign" may be based on the content of Fran Ridge's online report "The Mantell incident" on the NICAP website. That report includes the following at the link below: